96 F. 1 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern California | 1899
The application of a few well-settled principles of law to the bill in this case will readily determine the question of jurisdiction raised by the demurrer hied thereto. That the bill in a suit in equity brought in a circuit court of the United States must affirmatively show the jurisdiction of the court over the case is thoroughly well settled. This must be done by such a clear statement of the facts that the court can see that it has jurisdiction. It is not enough, nor, indeed, proper, for the complainant to allege such jurisdiction as a legal conclusion; but such facts must be stated as will enable the court to draw the legal conclusions, and de
Now, looking at the bill, it is seen that the complainant alleges its ownership and possession of a certain 80-acre tract of land, situated within a certain mining district in Fresno county, Cal.’, upon which three several mining locations were made by the predecessors in interest and grantors of the complainant, after the discovery by them of petroleum thereon, and at a time when the land was open to such respective and successive locations. It is alleged that prior to the year 1890 the quarter section of land of which the 80-acre tract forms part was surveyed and subdivided and marked in accordance with the laws of the United States, and at that date was subject to exploration, entry, and purchase under its mining laws; that prior to May 2, 1890, a mining district called “Coalinga Mining District” was organized and established in Fresno county, Cal., pursuant to law, embracing, among other lands, the whole of the quarter section referred to, which district has ever since existed; that on January 1, 1893, the quarter section of land referred to continued'subject to exploration, location, claim, and purchase under the mining laws, and .that on that day certain named persons, to wit, W. H. H. Hart, C. M. Wells, J. E. Wilson, H. G-. Cates, George L. Arnold, M. T. Allen, J. A. Anderson, and J. A. Anderson, Jr., each of whom was a citizen of the United States,
The bill then alleges that, notwithstanding the discovery, location, claim, occupancy, development, and work of the complainant and its predecessors in interest, and well knowing the facts in reference thereto, the defendants and their grantors during the years 1897 and 1898 unlawfully and illegally caused notices to be posted upon the north half of the quarter section mentioned, and to be recorded in the mining records of the Coalinga mining district, or in the county recorder’s office of Fresno county, Cal., claiming to
The foregoing is a full synopsis of the allegations of the bill. In all this there is nothing whatever to show that the proper determination of the suit will necessarily involve the construction or effect of any law of the United States. Indeed, there is in all this nothing whatever to show that there is any dispute between the complainant and the defendants in respect to the construction or effect of any law of the United States. It may very well be that the sole defense that the defendants may interpose to the suit of the complainant may consist of a denial that there was ever any discovery upon the disputed premises of petroleum by any of the predecessors in interest and grantors of the complainant, or that the land in question in fact contains any petroleum, or that either of the locations under which the complainant claims was ever properly marked upon the ground or posted or recorded so as to constitute a valid mining location. However this may be, and whatever the defense may be, it is, I think, very clear that the bill falls far short of showing that